4.6 Article

Do Infants Really Expect Agents to Act Efficiently? A Critical Test of the Rationality Principle

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 4, Pages 466-474

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0956797612457395

Keywords

rationality; efficiency; goals; psychological reasoning; infant cognition; cognitive development; infant development; social cognition

Funding

  1. NICHD NIH HHS [HD-021104, R01 HD021104] Funding Source: Medline

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Recent experiments have suggested that infants' expectations about the actions of agents are guided by a principle of rationality: In particular, infants expect agents to pursue their goals efficiently, expending as little effort as possible. However, these experiments have all presented infants with infrequent or odd actions, which leaves the results open to alternative interpretations and makes it difficult to determine whether infants possess a general expectation of efficiency. We devised a critical test of the rationality principle that did not involve infrequent or odd actions. In two experiments, 16-month-olds watched events in which an agent faced two identical goal objects; although both objects could be reached by typical, everyday actions, one object was physically (Experiment 1) or mentally (Experiment 2) more accessible than the other. In both experiments, infants expected the agent to select the more-accessible object. These results provide new evidence that infants possess a general and robust expectation of efficiency.

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